The establishment of a National Indigenous Television Network (NITV) in Australia has been an important step in recognizing, sharing and mediating Indigenous cultures on broadcast television. The product of many years of lobbying, negotiation and contestation, NITV now broadcasts 24 hours a day into Australian homes from its base in the Special Broadcasting Service (SBS) network. NITV's location within one of the two publicly funded broadcasting channels constituted a sharp break from Indigenous television's prior history in community media, and debates about the implications of that rupture surrounded NITV's initial establishment. While developing as a separate free-to-air digital channel, NITV has had to deal with more far-reaching and...
Australians are currently served by two public broadcasting networks. While both the ABC and the SBS...
This dissertation is a genealogy of the discursive mechanisms of censorship that govern newsmedia re...
The government is giving with one hand and taking with the other, writes Ellie Rennie IF YOU happ...
The National Indigenous Television (NITV) service was launched in July 2007. NITV's public service b...
Broadcast television has most often been understood as a site for the narration of unified national ...
Australian television officially commenced in 1956, two decades after the United States and Britain....
This article focuses on how the Australian television industry deals with diversity: the extent to w...
International audienceThis chapter presents the relation beween Indigenous peoples in Australia and ...
This article asks, “How can indigenous media fulfill its obligations toward the indigenous populatio...
The National Indigenous Television Network was launched on SBS in 2012. Before then it had a life on...
Abstract: Indigenous communities in Australia and Canada are challenging notions of the cultural heg...
Abstract This article covers a wide range of projects from the earliest epistemological challenges p...
Typescript."February 2007"Thesis (PhD) -- Macquarie University, Division of Society, Culture, Media ...
Kerry McCallum and Lisa Waller locate the diverse, abundant and dynamic field of Indigenous media wi...
This paper draws attention to the lack of focus on multicultural issues in the context of the progra...
Australians are currently served by two public broadcasting networks. While both the ABC and the SBS...
This dissertation is a genealogy of the discursive mechanisms of censorship that govern newsmedia re...
The government is giving with one hand and taking with the other, writes Ellie Rennie IF YOU happ...
The National Indigenous Television (NITV) service was launched in July 2007. NITV's public service b...
Broadcast television has most often been understood as a site for the narration of unified national ...
Australian television officially commenced in 1956, two decades after the United States and Britain....
This article focuses on how the Australian television industry deals with diversity: the extent to w...
International audienceThis chapter presents the relation beween Indigenous peoples in Australia and ...
This article asks, “How can indigenous media fulfill its obligations toward the indigenous populatio...
The National Indigenous Television Network was launched on SBS in 2012. Before then it had a life on...
Abstract: Indigenous communities in Australia and Canada are challenging notions of the cultural heg...
Abstract This article covers a wide range of projects from the earliest epistemological challenges p...
Typescript."February 2007"Thesis (PhD) -- Macquarie University, Division of Society, Culture, Media ...
Kerry McCallum and Lisa Waller locate the diverse, abundant and dynamic field of Indigenous media wi...
This paper draws attention to the lack of focus on multicultural issues in the context of the progra...
Australians are currently served by two public broadcasting networks. While both the ABC and the SBS...
This dissertation is a genealogy of the discursive mechanisms of censorship that govern newsmedia re...
The government is giving with one hand and taking with the other, writes Ellie Rennie IF YOU happ...